Keynote speakers
More speakers will be announced over the coming weeks.

Sean Brady
Brady Heywood
Sean Brady
Sean Brady is a forensic engineer and a Fellow of Engineers Australia.
In 2020 he completed the Brady Review, which investigated the causes of fatalities in the Queensland mining industry. The review was tabled in parliament and made 11 recommendations to the regulator and mining companies on how to improve safety.
He also speaks and writes on the causes of technical and organisational failure.

Prof Sidney Dekker
Griffith University
Prof Sidney Dekker
Sidney Dekker (PhD Ohio State University, USA, 1996) is Professor and Director of the Safety Science Innovation Lab at Griffith University in Brisbane, Australia. Sidney has lived and worked in seven countries across four continents. He coined the terms ‘Safety Differently’ and ‘Restorative Just Culture’ in the 2010s, which have since turned into global movements for change. They encourage organisations to declutter their bureaucracy and enhance the capacities in people and processes that make things go well—and to offer compassion, restoration and learning when they don’t. His work has inspired generations of professionals and consultants globally. Many today will recognise Sidney’s ideas and concepts in for example ‘HOP,’ ‘Learning Teams,’ the ‘New View,’ and more.
An avid piano player and pilot who learned to fly at age 14, he has been flying the Boeing 737 for an airline on the side.
He is a trained mediator and Crisis Chaplain.
Sidney is prolific and bestselling author of, most recently: Ten Virtues of a Positive Safety Culture; Random Noise; Stop Blaming; Foundations of Safety Science; The Safety Anarchist; The End of Heaven; Just Culture; Safety Differently; The Field Guide to Understanding ‘Human Error’; Second Victim; Drift into Failure; Patient Safety; Compliance Capitalism; and Do Safety Differently.
He has co-directed the documentaries ‘Safety Differently,’ ‘Just Culture,’ ’The Complexity of Failure,’ and ‘Doing Safety Differently.’
His work has well over 21,000 citations and an h-index of 64.
Stanford has ranked Sidney among the world’s top 1% most influential scientists since Newton. More at sidneydekker.com